Sleep deprivation (SD) impairs information processing through alterations of prefrontal cortex (PFC) function, yet the molecular underpinnings of this process remain poorly understood. We previously s Show more
Sleep deprivation (SD) impairs information processing through alterations of prefrontal cortex (PFC) function, yet the molecular underpinnings of this process remain poorly understood. We previously showed that SD disrupts sensorimotor gating by elevating prefrontal levels of the neurosteroid allopregnanolone (AP), a positive allosteric modulator of GABA-A receptors. Here we identify a complementary, mechanistically independent process whereby SD alters GABA-A currents in the PFC of mice and rats. SD reduced membrane expression of the chloride exporter KCC2, leading to intracellular chloride accumulation and a depolarizing shift in GABA-A receptor reversal potential that weakened GABAergic inhibition. Pharmacological normalization of chloride homeostasis with bumetanide fully rescued SD-induced deficits in sensorimotor gating and information encoding. SD also upregulated BDNF, and intra-PFC antagonism of its receptor TrkB restored KCC2 expression and normalized information processing, identifying BDNF-TrkB signaling as an upstream driver of chloride dysregulation. Notably, blocking AP synthesis rescued behavioral deficits without correcting chloride imbalance, confirming mechanistic independence. Finally, combined administration of AP and a KCC2 blocker produced information-processing deficits akin to those induced by SD. These findings identify TrkB-dependent disruption of prefrontal chloride homeostasis as a druggable mechanism underlying sleep loss-induced cognitive dysfunction. Show less
Despite extensive studies on the neurobiological correlates of traumatic brain injury (TBI), little is known about its molecular determinants on long-term consequences, such as dementia and Alzheimer' Show more
Despite extensive studies on the neurobiological correlates of traumatic brain injury (TBI), little is known about its molecular determinants on long-term consequences, such as dementia and Alzheimer's disease (AD). Here, we carried out behavioural studies and an extensive biomolecular analysis, including inflammatory cytokines, gene expression and the combination of LC-HRMS and MALDI-MS Imaging to elucidate the targeted metabolomics and lipidomics spatiotemporal alterations of brains from wild-type and APP-SWE mice, a genetic model of AD, at the presymptomatic stage, subjected to mild TBI. We found that brain injury does not affect cognitive performance in APP-SWE mice. However, we detected an increase of key hallmarks of AD, including Aβ Mild TBI induces biochemical changes in AD genetically predisposed mice and the eCBome may play a role in the pathogenetic link between brain injury and neurodegenerative disorders also by interacting with the serotonergic system. Show less